He retained the great spheres which were supposed to carry them round Earth, inside the star sphere, but the chief feature of his system is the use of small spheres, which were fixed on the larger, and therefore called “epicycles,” while the large were known as “deferents” or carriers. The general principle of epicycles is very simple, as may be seen by comparing the two diagrams.
[Fig. 28] shows the path of Mars as we saw it among the stars of Pisces in the year 1909. Throughout July the planet was travelling in its usual direction, “with the signs,” but on August 22nd it came to a stop, then turned and travelled backwards “against the signs” until October 26th, when it stopped again, reversed its direction once more, and during the rest of the year moved rapidly forward.
[Fig. 29] shows the principle on which Ptolemy would have explained this curious track. Each planet was supposed to be fixed on a small circle, the epicycle, and this was fixed upon a large circle, or deferent, upon which it travels in the direction shown by the arrow, at a uniform speed, returning to the same place in the sidereal period of the planet. Thus Mars, as seen from Earth, which is near C the centre of the deferent, makes a great circle through all the zodiac in two years, Jupiter in twelve, and so on. But meanwhile the epicycle is rotating round its own centre, C1, and when the planet reaches the point marked S, the two motions neutralize one another, so that it appears stationary, as Mars did on August 22, 1909. After this, the motion of the epicycle more than counter-balances the motion of the deferent, and the planet seems to reverse its direction until it reaches the point on the epicycle marked S′. After this the two motions are once more in the same direction, so the planet is seen to move rapidly forward, as Mars did after October 26.
Fig. 28. The Path of Mars among the Stars, 1909.
Fig. 29. The Epicycle.